Necesito una historieta larga escrita en ingles pueden llevar imagenes
ClaraG1
Biography of Anna Frank BRIEF HISTORY Anna Frank, the second daughter of a middle-class couple, was born in Frankfurt on June 12, 1929. She was intelligent and sensitive, beautiful and vivacious, and was in the second year of the Jewish Lyceum at the age of thirteen. Among the gifts he received at that time were chocolates, some games, some books and a notebook with cardboard lids titled Diario.
Anna had excellent parents, a sister three years her senior, many comrades and even some admirers. But he missed an Amiga, with a capital letter: someone to entrust his innermost thoughts. Then he invented one: Kitty, and began to write him long and frequent letters in his Diary.
At that time, 1942, anti-Semitic persecution was on the increase. The Jews were apprehended by entire families and sent to concentration camps and extermination camps; Their belongings passed to the power of the German government. The Frank had to choose between falling into the clutches of the Gestapo - the German secret police - and hiding, since it was impossible to flee the country.
They then carefully prepared a shelter in the back room of an old merchant's house, where they transferred only the essentials for subsistence. And one rainy night they hid there disappearing as unexpectedly from the family home.
They shared the hideout with four other people. They had to live in it always, without being seen, without any signal alerting their neighbors or patrols - no light, no noise, no movement. Two faithful friends of the family provided them with food obtained in the black market, since the rationing was very strict and to resort to normal provisioning would soon have been discovered.
For two years, the eight fugitives coexisted closely and painfully until August 4, 1944, police stormed the back room. It was never known how he could discover them, but the unfortunate eight were arrested and transferred to concentration camps.
Only Anna's father survived the Nazi barbarism. She was detained in the Bergen-Belsen extermination camp, where she died in May 1945, after eight months of captivity and a few days before the German surrender.
A CASUAL CIRCUMSTANCE During the raid of the refuge everything that was in it was destroyed. Among the scattered books and magazines scattered about the floor, Anna's Diary was found intact and, with the exception of a few paragraphs that are not of general interest, was published in its entirety. This fortuitous event made it possible to know the personality of a talented teenager whose diary became an unquestionable testimony to the crime of war.
Anna read a lot in her small world of seclusion since, since reading was practically the only activity allowed, her father had had the foresight to gather a good amount of books. And in the hours that were not used in food, hygiene, studies or physical exercises - carefully planned to take full advantage of the scarce possibilities of movement - Anna read or meditated. He returned his reflections in the diary that he wrote for himself, without worrying about astonishment, and never having foreseen that it could be anything other than his confidential release.
Throughout its pages they impress the certainty of the judgment and the psychological penetration of the girl. Anna knows how to observe and observe herself, discover her own attitudes and the motivations of others, and transmit them with a touching mixture of freshness and maturity.
Espero que te pueda ayudar lo siento por no poner imagen.
BRIEF HISTORY
Anna Frank, the second daughter of a middle-class couple, was born in Frankfurt on June 12, 1929. She was intelligent and sensitive, beautiful and vivacious, and was in the second year of the Jewish Lyceum at the age of thirteen. Among the gifts he received at that time were chocolates, some games, some books and a notebook with cardboard lids titled Diario.
Anna had excellent parents, a sister three years her senior, many comrades and even some admirers. But he missed an Amiga, with a capital letter: someone to entrust his innermost thoughts. Then he invented one: Kitty, and began to write him long and frequent letters in his Diary.
At that time, 1942, anti-Semitic persecution was on the increase. The Jews were apprehended by entire families and sent to concentration camps and extermination camps; Their belongings passed to the power of the German government. The Frank had to choose between falling into the clutches of the Gestapo - the German secret police - and hiding, since it was impossible to flee the country.
They then carefully prepared a shelter in the back room of an old merchant's house, where they transferred only the essentials for subsistence. And one rainy night they hid there disappearing as unexpectedly from the family home.
They shared the hideout with four other people. They had to live in it always, without being seen, without any signal alerting their neighbors or patrols - no light, no noise, no movement. Two faithful friends of the family provided them with food obtained in the black market, since the rationing was very strict and to resort to normal provisioning would soon have been discovered.
For two years, the eight fugitives coexisted closely and painfully until August 4, 1944, police stormed the back room. It was never known how he could discover them, but the unfortunate eight were arrested and transferred to concentration camps.
Only Anna's father survived the Nazi barbarism. She was detained in the Bergen-Belsen extermination camp, where she died in May 1945, after eight months of captivity and a few days before the German surrender.
A CASUAL CIRCUMSTANCE
During the raid of the refuge everything that was in it was destroyed. Among the scattered books and magazines scattered about the floor, Anna's Diary was found intact and, with the exception of a few paragraphs that are not of general interest, was published in its entirety. This fortuitous event made it possible to know the personality of a talented teenager whose diary became an unquestionable testimony to the crime of war.
Anna read a lot in her small world of seclusion since, since reading was practically the only activity allowed, her father had had the foresight to gather a good amount of books. And in the hours that were not used in food, hygiene, studies or physical exercises - carefully planned to take full advantage of the scarce possibilities of movement - Anna read or meditated. He returned his reflections in the diary that he wrote for himself, without worrying about astonishment, and never having foreseen that it could be anything other than his confidential release.
Throughout its pages they impress the certainty of the judgment and the psychological penetration of the girl. Anna knows how to observe and observe herself, discover her own attitudes and the motivations of others, and transmit them with a touching mixture of freshness and maturity.
Espero que te pueda ayudar lo siento por no poner imagen.